International Journal of COPD (Dec 2019)

Revefenacin: A Once-Daily, Long-Acting Bronchodilator For Nebulized Treatment Of COPD

  • Donohue JF,
  • Mahler DA,
  • Sethi S

Journal volume & issue
Vol. Volume 14
pp. 2947 – 2958

Abstract

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James F Donohue,1 Donald A Mahler,2,3 Sanjay Sethi4 1Pulmonary Medicine, UNC School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, NC, USA; 2Geisel School of Medicine at Dartmouth, Hanover, NH, USA; 3Director of Respiratory Services, Valley Regional Hospital, Claremont, NH, USA; 4University at Buffalo, State University of New York, Buffalo, NY, USACorrespondence: James F DonohueUNC School of Medicine, 4125 Bioinformatics Building CB#7020, Chapel Hill, NC 27599-0001, USATel +1 984-974-5703Fax +1 984-974-5737Email [email protected]: Bronchodilation with muscarinic antagonists, β2-agonists, and inhaled corticosteroids remains the foundation of pharmaceutical treatment for patients with stable COPD. These drugs are delivered from a variety of devices, including dry powder inhalers, pressurized metered-dose inhalers, soft-mist inhalers, or nebulizers. Nebulized delivery is often preferable in patients who are elderly, are cognitively impaired, are unable to generate sufficient inspiratory force to use their inhaler, have difficulty coordinating hand-breath activity, are too dyspneic to hold their breath for a sufficient time, and/or may be acutely ill. Revefenacin, a once-daily long-acting muscarinic antagonist for nebulization recently approved by the US FDA for the treatment of patients with COPD, was discovered and developed using “duration and lung selectivity-by-design.” This strategy selected a molecule with a high lung-selective index to maximize bronchodilation and limit systemic anti-muscarinic side effects. In early-phase clinical studies, revefenacin for nebulization led to a rapid onset of bronchodilation that was sustained for 24 hrs in patients with moderate to severe COPD. Revefenacin also demonstrated minimal systemic exposure and good tolerability in these studies. Statistically and clinically significant improvements in lung function (ie, peak and/or trough FEV1) relative to placebo were observed with revefenacin in Phase III clinical trials of up to 3 months in patients with moderate to very severe COPD. Revefenacin was well tolerated in Phase III clinical trials with a low incidence of systemic antimuscarinic adverse events, which is consistent with its lung-selective design. There was no evidence of an increased risk of major cardiovascular events. Patient-reported outcome data from clinical trials indicated statistically significant improvements in several disease-specific measures. Revefenacin 175 μg for nebulization provides an effective once-daily treatment option for patients with moderate to very severe COPD who require or prefer nebulized therapy.Keywords: long-acting muscarinic antagonist, LAMA, bronchodilator, inhaled, once daily, nebulizer

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